Dirks
matrix device



May 24, 1966 m/va TOR BY 5 WM 5 M y 1966 G. DIRKS Re. 26,032

MATRIX DEVICE Original Filed March 50, 1955 4 Sheets-Sheet & F /g.2.

INVENTOR W s M G. DIRKS MATRIX DEVICE May 24, 1966 4 Sheets-Sheet 3 Griginal Filed March 30, 1955 THAI/FM/fE/f IL u E INVENTOI? W zvw, BY W May 24, 1966 Original Filed March 50 1955 G. DIRKS MATRIX DEVICE 4 Sheets-Sheet 4 ///6// H155 f/l rm INVENTOR W 3 Quark Ma United States Patent Original No.

Matter enclosed in heavy brackets appears in the original patent but forms no part of this reissue specification; matter printed in italics indicates the additions made by reissue.

The present application is a division of the application Serial No. 498,041, filed by me on March 30, 1955, and entitled Teletyping Means for the Printing or Other Indication of Numbers and Other Information, issued on February 14, 1961, as United States Patent No. 2,972,016, which application Serial No. 498,041 is a continuation-in-part of the application Serial No. 101,032, filed by me on June 24, 1949, and entitled, Electronic Office Machine With Computing, Indicating, Printing, Storingand Sorting Mechanisms, and now abandoned.

The present invention relates to a means for the transmission of signals representing characters to be printed or typed or fed to some other devices and consists essentially of a method and means for converting input signals in serial order to output signals in parallel order so that each character may be printed or typed as a Whole even if the original signals represent parts of the character in a predetermined sequence.

The arrangement of the present invention is useful in making visible the result of a computation performed by an electronic digital computer at a high speed. The invention may be used with the computer disclosed in my copending patent application, Serial No. 432,093, filed May 25, 1954, now abandoned.

The invention provides a method of printing or other indication of characters wherein signal sequences representing parts of said characters are fed by a distributor into corresponding parts of a non-mechanical storage device, and are subsequently fed simultaneously from the parts of such storage device to printing or other indicating means.

The present invention is described as applied to a multidenomination line at a time high speed printer as an example. It is evident that it can be used also with a printer for one or a few denominations and printing on the dot or line principle or otherwise.

One of the main features of the operation of the invention is the use of an electronic distributor with electronic synchronizing means and, in the case of a teletyper, the use of such distributor and synchronizer both at the transmitting and receiving ends. The distributors are preferably cathode ray distributors, the cathode ray of which is deflected in dependence on synchronizing signals on the same signal carrier as the character-representing signals.

Another feature of the invention is the use of storage means, especially those of the magnetic type, either on the transmitter or receiver side, to increase the output of the arrangements.

In order that the invention may be readily carried into effect, it will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawing, wherein:

FIG. 1 is a perspective view of an embodiment of a multi-denomination for high speed printing according to the dot or line wise principle and adapted to print in different denominations simultaneously. Such a printer Re. 26,032 Reissued May 24, 1966 is described in my copending patent application, Serial No. 432,297, filed May 25, 1954, and now Patent No. 2,899,892;

FIG. 2 is a schematic circuit diagram of an embodiment of an electronic synchronizing and distributing means for the control of a multi-denomination printing device of the type shown in P16. 1', and

FIGS. 3a and 3b are schematic circuit diagrams of embodiments of a transmitting station and a receiving station, with a dot wise operating multi-denomination printer, coordinated electronic synchronizing means in the form of cathode ray distributors, and alternative magnetic storage means in the form of a magnetizable drum and a magnetizable tape on the transmitting side (FIG. 3a).

As stated, the invention is illustrated as applied to a printing device such as described in my copending patent application, Serial No. 432,297, filed May 25, 1954, in which characters are made up of dots and/or lines in rows, the rows usually running transversely across the characters so that, with a series of side by side characters, the said transverse rows extend through all the characters, and the complete sequence of characters can be printed by the simultaneous printing of the several rows of dots and/ or lines.

The invention is equally applicable to other indications of characters, such as, for example the visual indication means disclosed in my copending patent application, Serial No. 432,298, filed May 25, 1954, and now abandoned.

As shown in FIG. 1, a permanent magnet 1 has its magnetic circuit completed via parts of the separate printing levers 2 and the cores of the coils 3 and 4 these being arranged one behind the other as explained in the said copending patent application, Serial No. 432,297, filed May 25, 1954. The main shaft 5 is move-d up and down by the polarized magnetized elements 6 moving between the poles of magnets 7 and 8, which are energized by an alternating current or a current controlled by electronic tubes or by contacts and flowing through the coils 9 and 10 of the magnets 7 and 8; the coil 9 having terminals 11 and 12. By energizing of the magnet coils 3 4 and so on, in a selective sequence depending on the sequence of parts of characters in the transverse rows of the characters which are to be printed, the printing of the ditierent rows, collectively forming the shapes of the different characters, can be effected at high speeds. The speed is limited by the frequency which can be reached by pivoted levers controlled by magnet coils. Under the more difficult conditions of the usual rays, involving inductive and mechanical inertia, an armature frequency of 250 cycles per second in the printing devices is easily reached. The present construction reduces the restrictive effect of the inductive and mechanical inertia of the mechanism, and makes possible the printing of at least 250 dot lines per second, equalling 25 type character lines per second as a maximum speed. This output corresponds to 90,000 type character lines per hour, or in a multi-column printing unit of denominations, a working limit of 250 type characters per second.

The control of the energization of the printing magnet coils is eiiected in the example shown by the cathode ray distributor 13 of FIG. 2. The use of this relatively simple and inexpensive delay-less distributor is preferred for the present mode of high speed printing and teleprinting because it provides easy synchronization. Of course, inductive distributors or other electronic or electric distributing means may be used for the same purpose.

The printing arrangement of FIG. 1 and the cathode ray distributor of FIG. 2 operate together in the following way. The magnetic tape 14 (FIG. 3a) and the magnetic storage drum 15 (FIG. 3a) contain synchronizing signals or frequencies at 14a, 15a, respectively, in addition to the signals at 14b, 15b, respectively, representing the different type characters to be printed. In order to print the type characters by dots or lines when they are initially represented by signals in a different code, such other signal code must be converted to a suitable code for the dot and line system of character representation. In such a case the selective storage 15 of FIG. 321, will be used as a converter.

In the wiring diagram of FIG. 2 the pulse sequence representing the dots or lines in the top line of the row of side-by-side type characters, which is the first row to be printed, will be sensed in sequence by a magnetic sensing head 16, one end of the winding of which is connected to the control grid of the amplifier pentode 17. The consequent variations of the plate voltage of this pentode 17 are transferred via the capacitor 18 to the negatively biased control electrode 19 associated with one deflecting system of the double deflecting systems of the cathode ray tube 13.

The synchronization of the rotation of the cathode ray beam over the sectors 20* on the screen 13a with the movement of the storage device 14 or 15 is described in my copending patent applications, Serial Nos. 498,047, now forfeited, and 498,048, now Patent No. 3,042,09l, and is effected by means of the sensing head 21 the gap of which lies opposite the sine wave synchronization signals (14a, 15a) of the storage device. One end of the coil of this sensing head 21 is connected to the control grid of pentode 22. After amplification this synchronization frequency is applied to a phase-shifting device consisting of a bridge 23, 24. One pair of opposite arms of the bridge are resistive and the other pair of arms are capacitive. The values of the bridge arms are such that the sine waves at the two output junctions of the bridge have a phase difference of 90.

The output junctions of the bridge are connected to the deflecting plate systems 25 and 26, forming part of the upper electrode system of the cathode ray tube.

The negative bias of the control electrode 19 of the upper electrode system of the cathode ray tube is such that the intensity of the cathode ray beam passing over the secondary electron emitting sectors 20 f the screen 13a does not normally release a sufficient quantity of secondary electrons to produce an appreciable signal on the control grids of the thyratrons 27 and 28*, and so on, if no pulse is sensed by head 16 and amplified by pentode 17. If such a pulse is sensed the control electrode 19 becomes less negative for the duration of this pulse a positive pulse being applied to the electrode 19 via the capacitor 18, connected to the plate of pentode 17, and the intensity of the cathode ray beam is increased sufficiently for the corresponding sector on which the beam is then impinging to release secondary electrons in sufficient quantities to ignite the gas discharge tubes 27, 28, and so on.

In the main discharge circuit of these discharge tubes are connected the control electromagnets 3 4 of the printing unit. These are interconnected in any selected way, by manually pluggable connections 100.

The energization of the electromagnets 7 and 8 is controlled by the discharge tube 32, in the main discharge circuit of which the coils 9 and of these electromagnets are connected. If no more than about 100 to 200 coils are to be energized, the control of the control grid of the discharge tube 32 can be effected by pulses taken directly from the secondary emitting line which pulses occur once for each rotation of the cathode ray on the screen 1321.

With such a number of coils 3*, 4 and corresponding sectors on the screen 13a, a single cathode ray tube distributor can be used. With greater numbers of coils and sectors a plurality of cathode ray tubes would be used, operating in series.

In order that the cathode ray distributor may be used repeatedly within one complete printing cycle the second deflecting system of the cathode ray distributor operates one after another a series of discharge tubes under control of additional sectors 30 In this case, the igniting of the discharge tube 32 is effected by the top sector 30.

The deflection of the cathode ray beam of the deflecting plate system 25-31 is controlled by capacitor 23 in the plate circuit of pentode 22, one end of which capacitor is connected with one of said deflecting plates 25-31. With every cycle of the rotation of the cathode ray over screen 13a a pulse is produced by sector 20, effecting the ignition of the discharge tube 36. By this means the charging pentode 34 is made conductive for a short interval, although it is normally nonconductive in consequence of a negative bias applied to the control grid via the grid-leak resistance. By this means a stepwise deflection of the cathode ray, passing over the sectors 30 to 30, is effected in such a way that during every rotation of the other beam, said cathode ray is deflected by one step.

At the first rotation, the cathode ray passing over the sectors 30 to 30", having a predetermined intensity, ignites the discharge tube 32, via connection a, thus discharging capacitor 33. When impinging on sector 20", the other cathode ray effects the ignition of the discharge tube 36 via connection c. Capacitor 33 is charged by one unit, as described above, thus deflecting the cathode ray by one step onto sector 30 via connection b and igniting the coordinated gas discharge tube The gas discharge tube 35 produces across its cathode resistance 101 a plate voltage for the discharge tubes 27 of the upper row, which is just below the ignition voltage. Therefore, only this one of the rows is prepared to be ignited, if a pulse is applied to the control grids, connected in common to each sector 20 to 20 of the cathode ray distributor 13. Thus, only that one of the discharge tubes 27 can be ignited, which receives a pulse from the sectors 20 to 20 and is in the row of said discharge tubes controlled by the sectors 30 to 30 by having plate voltage applied thereto.

After one rotation of the cathode ray controlled by deflecting system 25 of the distributor the other cathode ray passes on to sector 30 as a result of igniting the discharge tube 36. Through the transformer 37 a negative pulse is applied to the grid of triode 38 to make it non-conducting and momentarily interrupt the above voltage supply to the discharge tubes 35 Therefore, the discharge tube 35 is extinguished, but those of the discharge tubes 27 which have been ignited are maintained by current through a resistance 29 which supplies a voltage a little higher than the extinguishing voltage of the discharge tubes 27 During the third rotation, the discharge tubes of the second row, controlled by discharge tube 35 (not shown in the drawing) will be rendered operative, during the fourth rotation the third row of discharge tubes will be rendered operative, and so on, so that after, for example, ten rotations of the cathode ray distributor, all the required discharge tubes will have been rendered operative. The coordinated coils 3 4 and so on will be energized to ensure that the respective printing levers 2 coordinated to these coils will not be effective to print.

In order to provide a substantial current pulse which is effective in the coils 3 and 4 the voltage of the positive pole, which, during the preparation phase described above, is only a little higher than the extinguishing voltage of the discharge tube is, shortly before the culmination point of the upward movement of shaft 5, changed over by switch 39 short circuiting resistor 40 to a higher voltage, just below the ignition voltage of the discharge tubes, the change occurring during a short interval beginning shortly before and ending shortly after the said culmination point. The switch 39 can be either a contact switch controlled by the mechanical movement of shaft 5, or it can be an electronic switch controlled by a discharge tube.

Instead of the changing of the voltage from a little higher than the extinguishing voltage to a little below the ignition voltage of the discharge tubes, discharge tubes with an additional electrode can be used. Such tubes would be ignited by the ignition electrode, maintained operative by the additional electrode during the preparation cycle and operated for a short interval by the control grid and main discharge circuit between the ordinary plate and the cathode. The main discharge circuit can the only be effective for the preignited discharge tubes during the short interval at the respective movements when the printing levers are at their upper culminating points. The discharge tubes can either be provided with a heated cathode (thyratron) or with a cold cathode.

The multi-column printing units can be used also for teleprinting according to FIGS. 3a and 3b. In this case, the printing unit at the transmitting station is the same as described above. The intensity of the ray of the cathode ray distributor 41 is controlled by the pentode 42 which also applies the same pulses to the modulating stage of the transmitter 43. The pentode 44 transfers the synchronization frequency from the storage drum or the storage tape 14 to the deflecting plate systems 45 and 46 over the phase shifting bridge 47, transferring the same frequency to the modulating stage of the transmitter 43. Both modulations are transmitted by the said transmitter.

The different sectors of the cathode ray distributor screen 48 effect the selective ignition of the multi-denomination tubes 49 controlling the multi-denomination printing unit 50 with its coils 3 4 (see FIG. 1) via the plug board 51. In this case, the discharge tubes 49 are shown as tubes with cold cathodes. The up and down movement of the main shaft 5 (see FIG. 1), with the several printing levers, is controlled again by the cathode ray distributor 41 by means of the discharge tube 52. The extinguishing of the discharge tube 52 is effected by breaking the circuit by means of a contact 53 controlled mechanically by the moving ends of the main shaft 5.

At the receiving station a similar arrangement exists. The transfer is effected dot line per dot line via receiver 54 (FIG. 3b), the cathode ray distributor 55 and the printing unit 50. The transmitted or received pulses are conducted from the receiver to the filters 56 and 57 of which the filter 57 passes lower frequencies, such as the synchronizing frequencies, whereas the filter 56 passes higher frequencies, such as the pulses representing the characters to be printed.

The lower frequency passed by the filter 57 is amplified in pentode 58 controlling, after the amplification, the deflection plate system 59 and 60, the voltages being chosen in such a way that the voltages at deflecting plate system 59 are phase-shifted by 90 degrees compared with the voltage controlling the deflecting system 60. The amplification of the pulses by pentode 61 controls the intensity of the cathode ray in the cathode ray tube 55 according to whether or not, at the moment concerned the control electrode 62 becomes less negative than its bias. As the rotation of the cathode ray in the cathode ray distributor 41 at the transmitting station is effected by the same control frequency as controls the rotation of the cathode ray in the distributor 55, the cathode ray of the cathode ray distributor screen 48 passes at every moment of the cycle the sector in distributor 46 corresponding to the sector passed over by the cathode ray of the cathode ray distributor 55. This single control frequency can be taken from a storage drum or a storage tape or from a synchronizing generator, which may produce the two alternating currents,

the voltages of which are relatively shifted by degrees by an off-set arrangement of their windings. The printing can likewise be effected by the multi-column unit 50 via the ignition of the control discharge tubes 49 which are connected to different sectors of the cathode ray distributor screen 63.

The movement of the main shaft, corresponding to main shaft 5 of FIG. 1, is controlled by an arrangement similar to magnetic systems 7 and 8 of FIG. 1.

Any suitable data synchronizing system may be utilized to control the printing levers or the like instead of the combination of the cathode ray distributor and discharge tubes or the like. A suitable data synchronizing system will operate with great accuracy although long distances may be involved.

The pulses controlling the movement of the main shaft of the printing unit can be used also as synchronization pulses for the sawtooth control of a discharge circuit, to the capacitor of which the horizontal deflecting plates of a cathode ray tube are connected in parallel. If in this case the cathode ray tube has the ordinary luminescent screen and the pulses amplified via pentode 61 are applied to the control electrode of the cathode ray tube 55, the printing dot lines can be made visible on the screen of the cathode ray tube due to the fact that within every horizontal line the intensity of the cathode ray will be controlled in accordance with the transmitted type character pulses.

By means of the plug board 51 the arrangements of the type character rows on the paper sheet can be chosen simply by corresponding connections between coils 3 and discharge tubes 49 The type character coding device, coding the type character symbol pulses into printable or visible type character pulse sequences is described in my copending patent application Serial No. 498,055, filed March 30, 1955, now Patent No. 2,982,951.

What I claim is:

"1. In a signal storage arrangement, in combination, a printing or other indicating mechanism having a plurality of printing or other indicating members; control means for controlling each of said plurality of printing or other indicating members; [magnetizable] signal carrier means having signals recorded serially thereon; signal sensing means positioned in operative proximity to said signal carrier means and adapted to sense signals recorded on the said signal carrier means; a storage device having a first group of components comprising a plurality of substantially parallel spaced conductors, a second group of components comprising a plurality of substantially parallel spaced conductors positioned with said first group of components and transverse to the said first group of components, each of the conductors of said first group of components intersecting each of the conductors of said second group of components; energizing means including first electronic signal distributor means having an input connected to said signal sensing means and a plurality of outputs connected to the conductors of said first group of components, said first electronic signal distributor means being adapted to energize selected ones of said last-mentioned conductors under the control of signals sensed by said signal sensing means and second electronic signal distributor means having an input connected to said signal sensing means and a plurality of outputs connected to the conductors of said second group of components, said second electronic signal distributor means being adapted to energize selected ones of said last-mentioned conductors under the control of signals sensed by said signal sensing means; a plurality of storage elements each having an energized stable storage condition and an unenergized stable condition and each connected between a conductor of said first group of components and a conductor of said second group of components at the intersection of each of the conductors of said first and second groups of conductors so that each of the storage elements connected at the intersection of and between a pair of energized conductors is energized to said energized stable storage condition in dependence upon signals recorded on said signal carrier means; and means connecting each or said storage elements to a corresponding one of said control means to provide parallel control of said control means and to provide parallel control of said printing or other indicating members through the said control means and means for retaining the storage condition in their stable storage condition upon deenergization of said energizing means.

2. In a signal storage arrangement, in combination, a printing or other indicating mechanism having a plurality of printing or other indicating members; control means for controlling each of said plurality of printing or other indicating members; [magnetizable] signal carrier means having signals recorded serially thereon; signal sensing means positioned in operative proximity to said signal carrier means and adapted to sense signals recorded on the said signal carrier means; a storage device having a first group of components comprising a plurality of substantially parallel spaced conductors, a second group of components comprising a plurality of substantially parallel spaced conductors positioned with said first group of components and transverse to the said first group of components, each of the conductors of said first group of components intersecting each of the conductors of said second group of components; energizing means including first electronic signal distributor means having an input connected to said signal sensing means and a plurality of outputs connected to the conductors of said first group of components, said first electronic signal distributor means being adapted to energize selected ones of said last-mentioned conductors under the control of signals sensed by said signal sensing means and second electronic signal distributor means having an input connected to said signal sensing means and a plurality of outputs connected to the conductors of said second group of components, said second electronic signal distributor means being adapted to energize selected ones of said last-mentioned conductors under the control of signals sensed by said signal sensing means; a plurality of storage tubes each having an energized stable storage condition and an unenergized stable condition and each having a control grid connected to a conductor of said first group of components and an anode connected to a conductor of said second group of components at the intersection of each of the conductors of said first and second groups of conductors so that each of the storage tubes connected at the intersection of and between a pair of energized conductors is energized to said energized stable storage condition in dependence upon signals recorded on said signal carrier means; and means connecting each of said storage tubes to a corresponding one of said control means to provide parallel control of said control means and to provide parallel control of said printing or other indicating members through the said control means retaining means for retaining any storage element energized to a stable storage condition in said stable storage condition upon de-energization of said energizing means; and means for de-energizing said energized storage elements whenever required so that they return into their unenergized stable condition.

3. In a signal storage arrangement, in combination, a printing or other indicating mechanism having a plurality of printing or other indicating members; control means for controlling each of said plurality of printing or other indicating members; [magnetizable] signal carriers means having signals recorded serially thereon; signal sensing means positioned in operative proximity to said signal carrier means and adapted to sense signals ltl recorded on the said signal carrier means; a storage device having a first group of components comprising a plurality of substantially parallel spaced conductors, a second group of components comprising a plurality of substantially parallel spaced conductors positioned with said first group of components and transverse to the said first group of components, each of the conductors of said first group of components intersecting each of the conductors of said second group of components, energizing means including first electronic signal distributor means having an input connected to said signal sensing means and a plurality of outputs connected to the conductors of said first group of components, said first electronic signal distributor means being adapted to energize selected ones of said last-mentioned conductors under the control of signals sensed by said signals sensing means and second electronic signal distributor means having an input connected to said signal sensing means and a plurality of outputs connected to the conductors of said second group of components, said second electronic signal distributor means being adapted to energize selected ones of said last-mentioned conductors under the control of signals sensed by said signal sensing means; a plurality of gas discharge tubes each having an energized stable storage condition and an unenergized stable condition and each having a control grid connected to a conductor of said first group of components and an anode connected to a conductor of said second group of components at the intersection of each of the conductors of said first and second groups of conductors so that each of the gas discharge tubes connected at the intersection of and between a pair of energized conductors is energized to said energized stable storage condition in dependence upon signals recorded on said signal carrier means; and means connecting each of said gas discharge tubes to a corresponding one of said control means to provide parallel control of said control means and to provide parallel control of said printing or other indicating members through the said control means and means for retaining the storage elc ments energized to said energized stable storage condition in their stable storage condition upon de-encrgization of said energizing means.

4. In a signal storage arrangement, in combination, a printing or other indicating mechanism having a plurality of printing or other indicating members; control means for controlling each of said plurality of printing or other indicating members; [magnetizable] signal carrier means having signals recorded serially thereon; first and second signal sensing means positioned in operative proximity to said signal carrier means and adapted to sense signals recorded on the said signal carrier means; a storage device having a first group of components comprising a plurality of substantially parallel spaced conductors; a second group of components comprising a plurality of substantially parallel spaced conductors positioned With said first group of components and transverse to the said first group of components, each of the conductors of said first group of components intersecting each of the conductors of said second group of components; energizing means including first cyclically operating electronic signal distributor means having an input electrode for controlling the intensity of an electron beam and connected to said first signal sensing means, a plurality of target electrodes means connected to the conductors of said first group of components for deriving an output signal from each of said target electrodes, and control electrode means for causing said electron beam to pass sequentially over said target electrodes and connected to said second signal sensing means thereby to control the cyclic operation of said first electronic signal distributor means, said first electronic signal distributor means being adapted to energize selected ones of said last-mentioned conductors under the control of signals sensed by said first and second signals sensing means and second cyclically operating electronic signal distributor means having an input electrode for controlling the intensity of an electron beam and connected to said first signal sensing means, a plurality of target electrodes, means connected to the conductors of said second group of components for deriving an output signal from each of said target electrodes, and control electrode means for causing said electron beam to pass sequentially over said target electrodes thereby to control the cyclic operation of said second electronic signal distributor means, said second electronic signal distributor means being adapted to energize selected ones of said lastmentioned conductors under the control of signals sensed by said first signal sensing means; a plurality of storage elements each having an energized stable storage condition and an unenergized stable condition and each connected between a conductor of said first group of components and a conductor of said second group of components at the intersection of each of the conductors of said first and second groups of conductors so that each of the storage elements connected at the intersection of and between a pair of energized conductors is energized to said energized stable storage condition in dependence upon signals recorded on said signal carrier means; and means connecting each of said storage elements to a corresponding one of said control means to provide parallel control of said control means and to provide parallel control of said printing or other indicating members through the said control means and means for retaining the storage elements energized to said energized stable storage condi' tion in their stable storage condition upon de-energization of said energizing means.

5. In a signal storage arrangement, in combination, a printing or other indicating mechanism having a plurality of printing or other indicating members; control means for controlling each of said plurality of printing or other indicating members; [magnetizable] signal carrier means having signals recorded serially thereon; first and second signal sensing means positioned in operative proximity to said signal carrier means and adapted to sense signals recorded on the said signal carrier means; a storage device having a first group of components comprising a plurality of substantially parallel spaced conductors, a second group of components comprising a plurality of substantially parallel spaced conductors positioned with said first group of components and transverse to the said first group of components, each of the conductors of said first group of components intersecting each of the conductors of said second group of components; energizing means including first cyclically operating electronic signal distributor means having an input electrode for controlling the intensity of an electron beam and connected to said first signal sensing means, a plurality of target electrodes, means connected to the conductors of said first group of components for deriving an output signal from each of said target electrodes, and control electrode means for causing said electron beam to pass sequentially over said target electrodes and connected to said second signal sensing means thereby to control the cyclic operation of said first electronic signal distributor means, said first elec tronic signal distributor means being adapted to energize selected ones of said last-mentioned conductors under the control of signals sensed by said first and second signal sensing means and second cyclically operating electronic signal distributor means having an input electrode for controlling the intensity of an electron beam and connected to said first signal sensing means, a plurality of target electrodes, means connected to the conductors of said second group of components for deriving an output signal from each of said target electrodes, and control electrode means for causing said electron beams to pass sequentially over said target electrodes thereby to control the cyclic operation of said second electronic signal distributor means, said second electronic signal distributor means being adapted to energize selected ones of said last-mentioned conductors under the control of signals sensed by said first signal sensing means; a plurality of storage tubes each having an energized stable storage condition and an unenergized stable condition and each having a control grid connected to a conductor of said first group of components and an anode connected to a conductor of said second group of components at the intersection of each of the conductors of said first and second group of conductors, so that each of the storage tubes connected at the intersection of and between a pair of energized conductors is energized to said energized stable storage condition in dependence upon signals recorded on said signal carrier means; and means connecting each of said storage tubes to a corresponding one of said control means to provide parallel control of said control means and to provide parallel control of said printing or other indicating members through the said control means and means for retaining the storage elements energized to said energized stable storage condi tion in their stable storage condition upon de-energizution of said energizing means.

6. In a signal storage arrangement, in combination, a printing or other indicating mechanism having a plurality of printing or other indicating members; control means for controlling each of said plurality of printing or other indicating members; [magnetizable] signal carrier means having signals recorded serially thereon; first and second signal sensing means positioned in operative proximity to said signal carrier means and adapted to sense signals recorded on the said signal carrier means; a storage device having a first group of components comprising a plurality of substantially parallel spaced conductors, a second group of components comprising a plurality of substantially parallel spaced conductors positioned with said first group of components and transverse to the said first group of components, each of the conductors of said first group of components intersecting each of the conductors of said second group of components; energizing means including a cathode ray tube comprising first cyclically operating electronic signal distributor means having a first input electrode for controlling the intensity of an electron beam and connected to said first signal sensing means, a first plurality of target electrodes, means connected to the conductors of said first group of components for deriving an output signal from each of said first plurality of target electrodes, and first control electrode means for causing said electron beam to pass sequentially over said first plurality of target electrodes and connected to said second signal sensing means thereby to control the cyclic operation of said first electronic signal distributor means, said first electronic signal distributor means being adapted to energize selected ones of said last-mentioned conductors under the control of signals sensed by said first and second signal sensing means and second cyclically operating electronic signal distributor means having a second input electrode for controlling the intensity of an electron beam and connected to said first signal sensing means, a second plurality of target electrodes, means connected to the conductors of said second group of components for deriving an output signal from each of said second plurality of target electrodes, and second control electrode means for causing said electron beam to pass sequentially over said second plurality of target electrodes thereby to control the cyclic operation of said second electronic signal distributor means, said second electronic signal distributor means being adapted to energize selected ones of said last-mentioned conductors under the control of signals sensed by said first signal sensing means; a plurality of storage tubes each having an energized stable storage condition and an unenergized stable condition and each having a control grid connected to a conductor of said first group of components and an anode connected to a conductor of said second group of components at the intersection of each of the conductors of said first and second groups of conductors so that each of the storage tubes connected at the intersection of and between a pair of energized conductors is energized to said energized stable storage condition in dependence upon signals recorded on said signal carrier means; and means connecting each of said storage tubes to a corresponding one of said control means to provide parallel control of said control means and to provide parallel control of said printing or other indicating members through the said control means and means for retaining the storage elements energized to said energized stable storage condition in their stable storage condition upon deencrgization of said energizing means.

7. In a signal storage arrangement, in combination, a printing or other indicating mechanism having a plurality of printing or other indicating members; control means for controlling each of said plurality of printing or other indicating members; [magnctizable] signal carrier means having signals recorded serially thereon; signal sensing means positioned in operative proximity to said signal carrier means and adapted to sense signals recorded on the said signal carrier means; a storage device having a first group of components comprising a plurality of substantially parallel spaced conductors; a second group of components comprising a plurality of substantially parallel spaced conductors positioned with said first group of components and transverse to the said first group of components, each of the conductors of said first group of components intersccting each of the conductors of said second group of components energizing means including first electronic signal distributor means having an input connected to said signal sensing means and a plurality of outputs connected to the conductors of said first group of components, said first electronic signal distributor means being adapted to energize selected ones of said last-mentioned conductors under the control of signals sensed by said signals sensing means and second electronic signal distributor means having an input connected to said signal sensing means and a plurality of outputs connected to the conductors of said second group of components, said second electronic signal distributor means being adapted to energize selected ones of said last-mentioned conductors under the control of signals sensed by said signal sensing means; a plurality of storage elements each having an energized stable storage condition and an unencrgized stable condition and each connected between a conductor of said first group of components and a conductor of said second group of components at the intersection of each of the conductors of said first and second groups of conductors so that each of the storage elements connected at the intersection of and between a pair of energized conductors is energized to said energized stable storage condition in dependence upon signals recorded on said signal carrier means, each of said first and second signal distributors being adapted to operate in a cycle of a determined number of. steps, one of said first and second electronic signal distributors being adapted to provide an end-of-cycle signal upon the completion of its cycle; means for transmitting the endof-cycle signal from said one of said signal distributors to the other of the said signal distributors thereby to advance the said other of the said signal distributors one step; and means connecting each of said storage elements to a corresponding one of said control means to provide parallel control of said control means and to provide parallel control of said printing or other indicating members through the said control means and means for retaining any storage element energized to a stable storage condition in said stable storage condition upon deenergization of said energizing means.

References Cited by the Examiner The following references, cited by the Examiner, are of record in the patented file of this patent or the original patent.

UNITED STATES PATENTS 1,779,748 10/ 1930 Nicolson. 1,962,447 6/1934 Karolus 340166 X 2,540,654 2/1951 Cohen et al. 2,594,731 4/1952 Connolly 315-9 X 2,749,480 6/1956 Ruderfer 340-166 X 2,869,111 1/1959 Young 34()166 X ROBERT C. BAILEY, Primary Examiner.

P. J. HENON, Assistant Examiner. 

